Peptides (from the Greek πεπτος, "digestible"), are the family of short molecules formed from the linking, in a defined order, of various α-amino acids. The link between one amino acid residue and the next is an amide bond, and is sometimes referred to as a peptide bond.
Proteins are polypeptide molecules. The distinction is that peptides are short and proteins are long. There are several different conventions to determine these, all of which have flaws.
One convention is that those peptide chains that are short enough to be made synthetically from the constituent amino acids are called peptides rather than proteins. However with the advent of better synthetic techniques, peptides as long as hundreds of amino acids can be made, including full proteins like ubiquitin. Native chemical ligation has given access to even longer proteins, and so this convention seems to be outdated.
Another convention places an informal dividing line is at approximately 50 amino acids in length (some people claim shorter lengths). However, this definition is somewhat arbitrary — some peptides such as alzheimer's beta peptide can be considered proteins and some proteins (such as insulin) are close to the upper limit for peptides. Because of the arbitrary nature of this definition, there is considerable movement within the scientific community to ascribe the more-specific definition that "a peptide is an amino acid molecule without secondary structure; on gaining defined structure, it is a protein." Thus the same molecule can be either a peptide or a protein depending on its environment, though there are peptides that cannot be proteins.
There are three large classes of peptides, according to how they are produced:
Peptides have received prominence in molecular biology in recent times. There are several reasons for this. The first and most important is that peptides allow the creation of antibodies in animals without the need to purify your protein of interest. You can simply make antigenic peptides of sections of your protein. These will suffice in making antibodies in a rabbit or mouse against your protein.
Another reason is that peptides have become instrumental in mass spectrometry, allowing the identification of proteins of interest based on peptide masses and sequence.
Peptides have recently been used in the study of protein * and function. For example, synthetic peptides can be used as probes to see where protein-peptide interactions occur.
Inhibitory peptides are also used in clinical research, to examine the effects of peptides on the inhibition of cancer proteins and other diseases.
These peptides are ribosomal peptides, usually with hormonal activity. All of these peptides are synthesized by cells as longer "propeptides" or "proproteins" and truncated prior to exiting the cell. They are released into the bloodstream where they perform their signalling functions.
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